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Vintage Marklin HO Scale Model Railroad Layout Tour 1950s Märklin Model Railway

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  • Опубликовано: 11 май 2018
  • #Marklin #Märklin #LayoutTour #HOScale
    Please support TSG Multimedia on Patreon!
    www.patreon.com/tsgmultimedia #trains #Marklin #Vintage #railroads
    Here's something you don't see every day! This gorgeous collapsible model railroad layout was custom hand-crafted in Germany by a husband and wife team in the 1950s for the Hill family.
    It has been in the family now for almost 70 years, and has provided holiday cheer and excitement for children of every age in the family for generations. This unique HO Scale train layout is durable enough that it will continue to provide the same for many more generations!
    In this tour, we get a look at how the layout is constructed, hear about its history from owner Harry "Bink" Hill, and also get to see lots of vintage Marklin equipment running on the layout as professional garden railroad track foreman Curtis Hill carefully switches the blocks to avoid collisions as multiple trains speed around on this unusual layout.
    Add to this an introduction of several pieces of rare vintage Marklin equipment by superstar of prototype and model railroading, Kevin Hill, and you have a unique video tour unlike anything else you will see anywhere!
    If you enjoy this content, please hit the "like" button and share it with your friends on social media!
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Комментарии • 141

  • @bucherwurm5344
    @bucherwurm5344 Месяц назад +2

    Incredible to think that the creators of this layout are no longer with us, yet their craft still lives on.

  • @urrugames4062
    @urrugames4062 Месяц назад +1

    What an amazing and inspirational video. Absolutely amazing that the first locomotive from 1953 still running that great. Thank you so much for the video.

  • @lornova79
    @lornova79 2 месяца назад +2

    Thank you for sharing this beautiful family memory. And I will certainly steal the foldable layout idea.

  • @owenmccarthy2521
    @owenmccarthy2521 3 года назад +8

    That’s honestly a really nice piece of family history. I’m glad they kept it working for so long

  • @brf64
    @brf64 2 года назад +3

    Our family grew up with the Markin trains as well. Ours was a homemade layout. We came into these trains since my uncle was stationed in Germany. We would run them mostly during Christmas also. My dad is now 88 and we decided to pull it out and put it under the tree since we didn't put them in service because there were many years of young kids that we didn't want touching them! Needless to say the engine fired up immediately after being stored for over 30 years. Amazing.

  • @BarefootCuer
    @BarefootCuer 4 года назад +13

    The SK 800 is based on the Class 06, your Class 50 is actually a class 44 and your class 3 is actually a Class 01 (241 built). Great Video!

  • @JDsHouseofHobbies
    @JDsHouseofHobbies 6 лет назад +18

    That was awesome. The history of a family heirloom reminds me how I got started in model railroading.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +3

      I think we can all relate in some way. I'm glad Kevin Hill contacted me to do this tour. It's really a great layout and a great family. We had a hilarious time filming that day. They remind me of the better parts of my own family!

  • @DonVintaggio
    @DonVintaggio 4 месяца назад +3

    Excellente video showcasing the detailed beautiful layout; and also impressive skill to manage so many trains running simultaneously controlling the switches to avoid disaster!

  • @Adlwarth
    @Adlwarth 3 месяца назад +1

    Thanks a lot for sharing your collection! Aprecciate it a lot as a young enthousiast, and also given that this art is slowly being forgoten by my generation, find it incredible the amount of effort you guys put into it. Great content!❤

  • @imagewire
    @imagewire 6 лет назад +5

    I had a Marklin as a child. I remember those little switch controllers and block controllers. At the time, Marklin didn’t make American models which I really wanted to have. Marklin has always been expensive so i spent all of my time in the basement of Berkeley Hardware drooling over what I knew I would never have.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +3

      Cool. You can tell these models are definitely higher end for their time. Made of metal and even at 65 years old everything still works. Not to say they have not done some maintenance on it, but the longevity of the whole setup is remarkable.

    • @philippedanjou5390
      @philippedanjou5390 4 года назад

      I have a large collection of vintage HO Marklin models. Some of them are older than I am ( was born in 1949) and they still pull their trains. Incredible longevity due to the quality if gerlan manufacturing. The only thing to be worried at is the metal fatigue which can be found on some of those made during war time and shortly after. But the mechanical parts seem made to last forever !
      Have a look at my RUclips Channel to see my Marklin trains running.
      And take care of yourself and your family during this trying coronavirus time!

  • @roge69charger
    @roge69charger 4 года назад +2

    I once worked pt for model rail road equipment corp. in midtown Manhattan nyc.back in 1972 i was at the counter where the Marklin line was located every so often while when the store was not busy i'd take out of the box one of these Marklin beauties. Never had saw and handled such a well made locomotives n cars etc...Marklin to me and still is one of the best line of model rr equipment to own.

  • @wulkatmonkt7178
    @wulkatmonkt7178 4 года назад +1

    I am living in good old Germany, and I got a Märklin beginner set in 1969 as a Xmas present, then completed it part for part. I built my own layout with love, and learned a lot of electrics, soldering a.s.o. ... It's long ago that I gave it away, but the elder I get the more I remember it with tears ... So I love to watch YT videos about Märklin H0 sets, and yours is special lovely. Liked that you tell about your father and that he wanted to remember our "little & small" Germany, and it fact - the layout meets it 100 %. Keep it running & enjoy it :-)

  • @JonatanGronoset
    @JonatanGronoset 5 лет назад +3

    Very excellent layout and trains, Märklin is very rare to find in the US and it makes me happy to see these people enjoy it. Cheers from another "Märklinist"!

  • @peterlutz7191
    @peterlutz7191 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for posting, My parents and brothers emigrated from Germany in 1960, in the late 1950s before we were approved for immigration into the U.S., my Dad built a model train that I sort of remember and I'd like to re-create that layout. This video helps bring back thatnmemory

  • @JohnDoe-uq3mx
    @JohnDoe-uq3mx 6 лет назад +12

    every kid's dream there, for those who are into model railroading.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +2

      This is the kind of layout I would have really liked as a kid. Now that I am a big kid I prefer the "prototypical" approach to running trains. Nonetheless, this layout is a remarkable creation.

    • @MilwaukeeF40C
      @MilwaukeeF40C 4 года назад +1

      Rich people. I got a thrift store Tyco.

  • @hansfehlow9657
    @hansfehlow9657 6 лет назад +1

    Wow memories! I was given my first Marklin set for my birthday in 1958 with an 0-4-0 tank engine and some freight cars. That thing was bullet proof for my young age!

  • @robbergin9586
    @robbergin9586 3 года назад +1

    what a wonderful heirloom and memory box!....and how wonderful you have all cherished and maintained this!

  • @rayarena879
    @rayarena879 2 года назад +1

    Wow! You are amazing! You take care of your trains, you even keep it in the original box! I've broken all of my old toys and the boxes like most kids did!

  • @mitchrozelle269
    @mitchrozelle269 6 лет назад +6

    Very cool! A layout in a box ! love the loco's ,and age of it all .It's got to be fun to run that layout and just watch the trains.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +2

      For sure, Mitch. This is not a prototype modeler's dream layout but it provides its own challenges and a different kind of skill to operate!

  • @cydneygeorge-abatecola1600
    @cydneygeorge-abatecola1600 6 лет назад +2

    Wow! I am so glad the Hill family shared this treasure. And thanks John for filming it!

  • @user-nv5lh8ib1p
    @user-nv5lh8ib1p Год назад +1

    Ha, similar story here. Thanks for sharing! Happy TG;)

  • @elsdp-4560
    @elsdp-4560 6 лет назад +6

    THANK YOU...for sharing. WOW!

  • @deandanielson8074
    @deandanielson8074 6 лет назад +8

    Loved the layout, the demonstration and the wonderful folding box concept !

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +2

      Indeed. That folding feature is very unusual. I loved it from the start. What a neat heirloom.

  • @LarryWGrant-dw6jo
    @LarryWGrant-dw6jo 6 лет назад +14

    Wow . . . nothing like I've ever seen before! Mommy, can I have one of those? Seriously, great video John, well done and I enjoyed the family history and participation by all the folks involved.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +3

      Thanks Larry! It's like I said on the podcast - this is not something you see every day!

  • @adamdelarozza1985
    @adamdelarozza1985 Год назад +1

    We were also stationed at Weisbaden in the Hitelburg housing area in 1969! I was just under 10 years old and all we had was comic books. We never got a train set for xmas . October fest took up all the money as buying beer was a higher priority than trains. I'm a Marklin guy now that I'm able to have my choice of priority.

  • @chadmartin2170
    @chadmartin2170 6 лет назад +6

    What a cool tour. John I really appreciate you sharing the Hill family's awesome treasure. Your videos are really great! Thank you kind Sir. This channel Rocks!

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +2

      Thanks for the great compliments. Help the channel grow by sharing it with your friends and family! :D

  • @Shipwright1918
    @Shipwright1918 2 года назад +1

    Well as I live and breathe, 3 rails! Like a mini-Lionel layout in a way, just German. Very beautiful!

  • @brianmccutcheon3205
    @brianmccutcheon3205 3 года назад +2

    Thank you for sharing appreciated. Great layout

  • @ruhstill1399
    @ruhstill1399 4 года назад +2

    Soooo charming ! Thanks for sharing !
    Warmest regards from Europe !

  • @stevie65able
    @stevie65able 5 лет назад +1

    Absolutely superb. Had a Marklin set as a kid, which we would put up at certain times of year. Started off with my older brother and continued with myself. So many of the freight cars and locos are familiar, as are the structures. Incredible that this layout functions so well after 60 years!

  • @defilippijeanlouis8820
    @defilippijeanlouis8820 11 месяцев назад +1

    Super le petit reseau pliant ingénieux les anglais 👍👍👍👍👏👏👏

  • @strafrag1
    @strafrag1 6 лет назад +1

    Super layout and super memories for your family. I started with Maerklin in 1964 and never stopped.

  • @Graezist
    @Graezist 4 года назад

    Eine wundervolle kleine Bahn. Ich selbst habe wieder im alter von 36 Jahren begonnen, mich meiner Märklin h0 zu widmen. Nun ist alles digitalisiert. Doch ich liebe noch immer den Klang einer analogen Bahn.
    Viele Grüße und vielen Dank aus Deutschland

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  4 года назад

      Vielen Dank für das Ansehen des Videos und für den Kommentar zu Ihrer persönlichen Erfahrung. Es ist schön zu wissen, dass Menschen gemeinsame Interessen finden, mit denen sie sich verbinden können, unabhängig von unserer unterschiedlichen nationalen Herkunft.

  • @constantin1959
    @constantin1959 Год назад +1

    thank you for the interesting ideas i got from your video.

  • @patrav5542
    @patrav5542 5 лет назад +1

    Pure enjoy to see and they are outstanding quality products. Me and my boys pulled my old stuff just before christmas 2017. Also added up things and now we have an 4 curcuit track system up running analoge. So much bonding and pleasure between my sons and me with quality time. As soon they get little older and I will teach them so solder we will go Digital mode. Learning by doing. Thanks for sharing your beautiful Märklin layout. Regards from Sweden.

  • @andrewstewart876
    @andrewstewart876 6 лет назад +1

    Great video guys thanks. Great to see the whole family understands and appreciates it, also a nice collection of Marklin.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +1

      Thanks, Andrew! So glad you found and liked the video. Please share it with your friends if you think they would like it!

  • @casdeop
    @casdeop 2 года назад +1

    So nice, I love the old analog Marklin layouts.

  • @boeroeng4182
    @boeroeng4182 2 года назад +1

    The people in that town must not be getting any sleep because of the noise!
    Very cool Very nice.

  • @elleryparsons5766
    @elleryparsons5766 2 года назад +1

    Beautiful!

  • @marcovaneverdingen3706
    @marcovaneverdingen3706 5 лет назад +1

    Beautifull personal document that shows thé purpose of modèl railroading: connecting people. Thank you for sharing.

  • @thehamelsduck1600
    @thehamelsduck1600 6 лет назад +1

    Dang that is cool how all the structures fold up with out hitting anything.

  • @paulkirkmanMYTRAINS
    @paulkirkmanMYTRAINS 6 лет назад +2

    Very very nice. I liked the family members all inputing their thoughts as well as operating. Great video John Thanks.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +1

      Thanks Paul glad you enjoyed it. Share it with your friends if you know anyone who also might like it.

  • @raymondleggs5508
    @raymondleggs5508 2 месяца назад +1

    I have some of those old Faller buildings.

  • @strafrag1
    @strafrag1 5 лет назад +1

    Wonderful video and story. This is the kind of magical Marklin layout which led me to my own Marklin world. Cheers.

  • @BritanniaPacific
    @BritanniaPacific 6 лет назад +3

    This is right up my alley, as I myself am a big fan of the German steam locomotives, as much as I am the American ones. The ones I enjoy most are the ones from the 1930s-50s, that includes those of World War II. The only problem with the marklin trains is the coupling system, and you cannot use them with other couplers like walthers, atlas, etc.

    • @christopherpeter978
      @christopherpeter978 6 лет назад +4

      You can always switch the couplers

    • @lukebarber9511
      @lukebarber9511 5 лет назад +1

      Well, their couplers being incompatible with American brands does make the trains even more realistic (except for when it comes to their USA-outline rolling stock...).

    • @MilwaukeeF40C
      @MilwaukeeF40C 4 года назад

      European model couplers don't work anything like the real ones. European railroads were always supposed to switch to knuckle-like couplers but never did. The committee has existed for like a century.

  • @teredude
    @teredude 4 года назад +1

    I got all my first Marklin Set from our Lowry AFB Thrift Store. The rest was history.

  • @Trapster99
    @Trapster99 3 года назад +1

    You have an amazing layout, and those engines are now antiques!

  • @jeffreyweldon6903
    @jeffreyweldon6903 5 лет назад +1

    What a beautiful layout and a fabulous use of space....very nice and inspiring!

  • @Don_Camillo
    @Don_Camillo 4 года назад +1

    We in germany call such a layout Epoque III (1945-1970). Nice, you got a piece of old Germany in post - war - time😁.

  • @GreenTekHaus
    @GreenTekHaus 4 года назад +1

    We had a similar Marklin HO set up, just not with a portable table, but a table that my dad had built out in the garage. We had about 10 engines at one time, but of course would only run about 3 at a time, and once in a while 4. I had 2 younger brothers, so that worked out pretty well, in keeping an eye on the set while managing the engines. Unfortunately, now it's all in boxes, but we hope to get the set out again and build it once some of our boys are off to collage, and some room opens up!

    • @mikeleppan8635
      @mikeleppan8635 2 года назад

      How did the layout build go? I stored mine for years while still continuing to add to the collection. After Covid struck and we went into a number of lockdowns - It was great to pullout all the rail, and build a working vintage layout! Have around 30 locos and perhaps 100 pieces of rolling stock... just love the solid feel and dependability of the older stuff. I have locos that I paid a few dollars for as they were not running or "damaged" only to find really simple things wrong and soon had them back in operation. A V200 for $5,00 is among my best runners.. just needed a service and new traction tires...

  • @rickyl7231
    @rickyl7231 6 лет назад +2

    Seems like the German counterpart to American's Lionel, right down to the three rails and fun accessories. That's Great!

  • @elleryparsons5766
    @elleryparsons5766 2 года назад +2

    Partying With Trains Is Way Better than Going to Bars.

    • @Adlwarth
      @Adlwarth 3 месяца назад

      Definitiv I prefer trains over a forgetful night drinking and saying nonsense!😂

  • @madhugn
    @madhugn 4 года назад +1

    Adorable layout and lovely story telling.

  • @deltanine6497
    @deltanine6497 6 лет назад +2

    Wow! Very nice, very impressive layout. Astounding reliability!
    'Brings to mind old the European/ Marklin layout at the Nut Tree off I80 near Sacramento back in the 70's. :-)

  • @paulbislin8471
    @paulbislin8471 6 лет назад +2

    Very, very nice! Modelrailroad history!

  • @jasonminier6782
    @jasonminier6782 2 года назад +1

    That is an incredible set up!

  • @fulviobabuder6099
    @fulviobabuder6099 5 лет назад +1

    Very nice and great idea to put away the railroad model.

  • @dave3156
    @dave3156 6 лет назад +2

    Great tour John--quite a design for the fold up! Glad it survived all the traveling it had to have done

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +1

      For sure! That is some high quality craftsmanship right there!

  • @guillaumeromain6694
    @guillaumeromain6694 4 года назад +1

    This is absolutely gorgeous. I love it !

  • @bluebear6570
    @bluebear6570 6 лет назад +5

    Thanks for sharing this wonderul layout with us.
    Just a few remarks to the locos:
    The SK 800 is based on a class 06 4-8-4 passenger loco, and not on the class 50, as mentioned in the video. The decapod is a class 44, and not a class 50 freight engine. Further more the Pacific is not a class 3, but a class 01 fast passenger steam engine. The class 24 never saw service throught Germany, butstayed mainly in the grasslands of eastern Prussia, hence their nick name "Prairie Horse". Only a few made it to the West at the end of WW II.
    The Sk 800 and the >Swiss Crocodile a treasured collector´s items these days, fetching horrific prices at auctions.

    • @kevin2472
      @kevin2472 6 лет назад +2

      Thanks for the information, being in the United States and not completely familiar with German Equipment we used Wikipedia( not always the most reliable source) to try and gather more information

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +2

      We need a re-shoot of the main actors? :))

    • @paulbislin8471
      @paulbislin8471 6 лет назад +2

      Just to add some more informations: the class numbers for steam engines in Germany goes about this: express engines = class 01 to 19; passenger engines = class 20 to 39; freight engines = class 40 to 59; passenger tank engines = class 60 to 79; freight tank engines/switchers = class 80 to 96; cogwheel engines = class 97; local RR‘s lightweight engines = class 98; narrow gauge steamers = class 99. In many cases a class number included only a single type (like class 44) but very often a class number several classes or subclasses of the same wheel arrangement (like class 18 which included: class 18.0 / class 18.1 / class 18.2 / class 18.3 / class 18.4 / class 18.5 / class 18.6). These were separted by the engine number groups: class 18.0 means engines numbered between 18 001 to 18 099, class 18.1 means 18 100 to 18 199, and so on. The 2-10-0 decapod wheel arrangement was the most common one for freight in Germany, including class 42 42.90, 43, 44, 50, 50.35, 50.40, 52, 58.0, 58.10. classes 44, 58.0 and 58.10 were heavy 3 cylinder engines, all others were intermediate or light 2 cylinder decapods. Streamlined express engines were classes 01.10, 03.10, 05, 06 and 19.10. All lost the streamlining after WW II.

  • @jasonatkins6926
    @jasonatkins6926 5 лет назад +1

    I appreciate you sharing.

  • @mikeleppan8635
    @mikeleppan8635 2 года назад +1

    Love the layout - used it as an inspiration to build my own vintage layout when Covid forced us into Lockdowns. I am actually a garden railroader - but having collected a pretty decent collection of around 30 locomotive from the 1950's to the 1970's - along with a decent collection of matching rolling stock... my aim was to reproduce a Marklin designed vintage layout offering the option of automatic train control using their contact tracks, signals and catenary. (Or completely manual control) I also used this as an introduction to train control and building a small layout fo my grandson who showed keen interest in the building of the layout. Would love to see a full track plan and some technical details of the layout.

  • @matthewjlee101
    @matthewjlee101 6 лет назад +1

    Amazing layout and family history!

  • @KerleyExpress
    @KerleyExpress 4 года назад +1

    That is a amazing layout thanks for showing it

  • @trentonlee9700
    @trentonlee9700 6 лет назад +4

    That was awesome

  • @shelleybeaudoin9901
    @shelleybeaudoin9901 6 лет назад +1

    Great video John, I'm impressed with how well the layout runs and looks for being 60 some years old.

  • @bewustsein
    @bewustsein 4 года назад

    Thank you for showing this great layout.

  • @curtisloewii.3032
    @curtisloewii.3032 5 лет назад +2

    You're a great family and you're daddy is/was an awesome man.
    Only a few years in germany and marklin get him on the hook.
    I've got a large marklin collection from childhood on - and I love the CCS 800/3015 "Crocodiles"...
    ...but my heart is beating for US Railroads, especially in the south and New England.
    Can I say: The (rail-)circle between the US and post-war Germany is not unbroken...?!
    Thx for the video and kind regards from Munich
    Chris

  • @solarbrother8886
    @solarbrother8886 6 лет назад +1

    Cool storage idea

  • @philippedanjou5390
    @philippedanjou5390 4 года назад +1

    Happy man! You own a piece of history, a real master arts work . Hope it will end up in a museum when time comes. I recognize on this layout many of the accesories, buildings, etc. which I owned in my young age. Some of them are still in my possession, and can be seen on my home-made Marklin vintage layout. Have a look at my RUclips channel which has a number of videos showing my collections of HO model trains, my permanent layout as well as several "temporary table-top layouts" built for the fun and dismantled after some playing time.
    Regards.

  • @SGTGhost
    @SGTGhost 6 лет назад +3

    Great Layout tour John.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +3

      Thanks SGT! Your continued support is always appreciated!

  • @J3scribe
    @J3scribe 6 лет назад +1

    That is absolutely brilliant!

  • @nowayjerk8064
    @nowayjerk8064 5 лет назад +1

    wow thanks for sharing

  • @GoodKingStephen
    @GoodKingStephen 5 лет назад +1

    Cool trains

  • @podrag
    @podrag 5 лет назад +1

    Brilliant thank you!

  • @raymondleggs5508
    @raymondleggs5508 3 года назад +1

    zoooooooooommmmmmmm!!!!!!!!!

  • @fotofisch
    @fotofisch 6 лет назад +1

    outstanding - i have some videos of older gauge 0 maerklin trains running

  • @Gleis-cy3jq
    @Gleis-cy3jq 4 года назад +1

    nice layout !

  • @Elios0000
    @Elios0000 6 лет назад +1

    LOVE German Era II

  • @johnfrench908
    @johnfrench908 6 лет назад +4

    That's pretty awesome. How it folds up like that.

  • @MrMx820
    @MrMx820 6 лет назад +1

    great Video!

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +1

      Thanks Bret. It was a great layout to document and I think we had a good time that day. Neat to see something last so long. Gives credit to the old saying "they don't make stuff like that any more."

  • @williamarseneau1575
    @williamarseneau1575 6 лет назад +1

    That was interesting, thanks!

  • @ATSFVentaSpurNscaler
    @ATSFVentaSpurNscaler 6 лет назад +1

    Wow, that is quite a layout! This is a prime example of 1960s West German engineering ingenuity and craftmanship. This layout in a box rivals many layouts of today. It's an amazing feat from the 60s. It seems that our hobby (especially its manufacturers) began a quest for ever-cheaper production that eventually resulted in offshoring manufacturing to China, which caused quality craftsmanship to be sacrificed. Can you imagine if a company built a similar, foldable layout in a box in N scale, for example, with the level of detailing available today to modelers. It would be outstanding! It would also probably cost about $25,000 or more. Thanks for sharing John! This was an amazing video!
    -from Tom Pilling

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +1

      It would cost $25,000 and no one would be able to buy it! :D Thanks for watching and commenting, Tom!

    • @MilwaukeeF40C
      @MilwaukeeF40C 4 года назад

      Model trains now are higher quality and more detailed than ever. The layout in this video was way outside of the budget of most families in the 1960s.

  • @lugi5804
    @lugi5804 4 года назад +1

    Your brother is the CEO of Not *Blinking*

  • @condorman-jd9xd
    @condorman-jd9xd Год назад +1

    A father legacy passed to his children now grown men still remembering him as they were his childs again. chicken pots.

  • @charlesdempsey176
    @charlesdempsey176 6 лет назад +2

    Very enjoyable, nice to see. I wonder if any other layouts built by them are still around?
    Road trip to Germany in your future John!

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +1

      Yes I saw a link with one similar but smaller than this one.

  • @elleryparsons5766
    @elleryparsons5766 2 года назад +1

    I would Rather deal with Model Railroading Than Parties.

  • @dancalmpeaceful3903
    @dancalmpeaceful3903 3 года назад +1

    I can only imagine how much money that initial set costs.......Marklin made Lionel look cheap when it came to costs....my Grandfather could only afford to buy Marx trains for my Dad and Uncle..... a train dealer once said to me at a show.....when it comes to Marklin....you need TWO wallets. Top quality though....I own an HO Croc myself.....wired for DC.

  • @Buddha-eb5yl
    @Buddha-eb5yl 4 года назад +1

    Nice Layout and Trains 🙂👍
    I use the same Tracks on my Märklin Modelleisenbahn !
    One Problem i see on your Layout, the great green Lokomotive lose her " Pantograph's " it's an Elektro Locomotiv !
    Sorry my English iss sad !
    Greetings from the Swabian Mountains near Ulm
    Holger
    P.S. The Name from this green Engine iss in German " Krokodil " it's from the Swiss Rail

  • @elleryparsons5766
    @elleryparsons5766 2 года назад +1

    What I see I Don’t Know if you can Do that Is To Put the Switch on The Other Board Across from The Operator. then You have One Guy Controlling The Trains The Other does The Switching Make Any Cense?

  • @alpteknbaser7773
    @alpteknbaser7773 2 года назад +1

    👏🙏

  • @newjerseydiesel8962
    @newjerseydiesel8962 Год назад +1

    I just got a 1982 marklin display board and was considering making it mine but now I don't know,. Is there value in an 80's display piece? Should I try to make it original or an I clear to chop it up?

  • @heygord
    @heygord 3 года назад +1

    Great layout. Our family has some old vintage Marklin, and a lot of new stuff now. What did you do with the original transformers?

  • @raymondleggs5508
    @raymondleggs5508 Год назад +1

    Judging by the fact there is an actual 3rd rail instead of stud contacts, it's a pre 1956 layout.

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  Год назад +1

      I thought I heard Harry say it was built for his father in 1959.

    • @raymondleggs5508
      @raymondleggs5508 Год назад +2

      @@tsgmultimedia Marklin tintroduced stud contacts in1956 but didnt phase the old rails out until 1960 although most shops carried the old rail and the stud contacts had to be ordered specially my mistake lol

  • @alleghenycityproductions
    @alleghenycityproductions 4 года назад +1

    awesome layout marklin is great questions 1 what is the song used in the video? 2 would i have to get wall socket adaptors to run these trains in the states?

  • @cydneygeorge-abatecola1600
    @cydneygeorge-abatecola1600 6 лет назад +4

    I was curious if there were any remaining layouts built by Fritz Berger and found this one. Just use Google translate to read the site but plenty of pics available. alte-modellbahnen.xobor.de/t37102f2-Nach-Jahren-endl-iacute-ch-wieder-eine-alte-Maerklin-Anlage.html

  • @philippedanjou5390
    @philippedanjou5390 4 года назад +1

    Hi again. Could you confirm the exact date of construction of the layout ? I believe it would be before 1956, and after 1950...

    • @hhill1234
      @hhill1234 3 года назад

      The layout was built in 1961.

  • @alfors
    @alfors 4 года назад +1

    Absolutely fantastic!
    Just a question: Where is the cabling running?

    • @hhill1234
      @hhill1234 3 года назад

      The wiring is above the layout , but beneath the landscaping. The cabling runs beneath the tracks or adjacent to the tracks. The only place you can see the wiring is at the hinges and at the connection of the switches at the control panel. It is a dilemma when replacing a signal or a track switch on the layout.

  • @GoodKingStephen
    @GoodKingStephen 5 лет назад +1

    My dad is to

  • @FeuerbaendigerFW
    @FeuerbaendigerFW 6 лет назад +1

    Very nice! But where have the pantographs of the crocodile gone? 😉

    • @tsgmultimedia
      @tsgmultimedia  6 лет назад +1

      If you watch through to the end, you will find out!

    • @FeuerbaendigerFW
      @FeuerbaendigerFW 6 лет назад +1

      TSG Multimedia ok, now it’s clear! It was late here in Germany and i stopped watching 😉

    • @hhill1234
      @hhill1234 3 года назад

      The pantograph had to be removed as they would not clear the tunnels. The layout has no overhead power source to utilize a pantograph. Which detracts from the ‘Crocodile locomotive’. I purchased the ‘Crocodile’ in this layout in May 1962, in Wiesbaden at a hobby store for 81 German Marks. The exchange rate at that time was 4.2 German Marks to the American Dollar. Cost brand new out of the box was about 20 American Dollars.